Monday, June 29, 2009
Death Penalty Repeal To Take Effect Wednesday
By Deborah Baker
Associated Press
SANTA FE — Although New Mexico officially abolishes the death penalty on Wednesday, that doesn't mean there won't be another execution in the state.
Two men are still on death row, their sentences untouched by the repeal and the governor unwilling to commute them. Two other potential death penalty cases are in the legal pipeline, awaiting trial.
Conceivably, the state could end up putting someone to death a decade or two after capital punishment was outlawed, given the drawn-out appeals typical in such cases.
"Nonsensical," sums up Jeff Buckels, head of the capital crimes unit of the New Mexico Public Defender Department.
"It makes no sense to be seeking the death penalty in a state which has abolished the death penalty," he said.
After a decade of effort, capital punishment opponents managed to persuade the Legislature in March to replace lethal injection with a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
The new law applies to certain murders committed as of July 1 and made New Mexico the second state — after New Jersey — to ban executions since the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty 33 years ago.
Unlike New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine, who commuted the sentences of eight men when he signed the death penalty repeal in 2007, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson declined to commute the sentences of Robert Fry of Farmington and Timothy Allen of Bloomfield.
The Legislature clearly intended the new law to go into effect July 1, and the governor respects that decision, Richardson spokesman Gilbert Gallegos said.
"He has no intention of commuting the sentence of anyone facing the death penalty before that effective date," Gallegos said this week.
Fry and Allen are still in the midst of their appeals processes, with no execution dates in sight. New Mexico has executed only one person since 1960: child killer Terry Clark in 2001.
The state Supreme Court is being asked, meanwhile, to rule out the possibility of death sentences in two pending murder cases: Michael Paul Astorga is charged in the shooting death of a Bernalillo County sheriff's deputy, and Billy Joe Watson is accused of hiring another man to kill a Roosevelt County rancher.
Among other arguments, their lawyers contend it would be unconstitutional to pursue death sentences now that New Mexico has decided it is no longer an acceptable punishment.
"It's over with, and the repeal applies to everybody," said Ruidoso lawyer Gary Mitchell, who represents Watson. Hel is co-counsel with Buckels in the Astorga case.
The Attorney General's Office disagrees, saying the repeal was specific and clear in its effective date, and defendants in pre-July 1 cases don't benefit from the new law.
Viki Elkey, executive director of the New Mexico Coalition to Repeal the Death Penalty, said her group was advised that a death penalty repeal could not be written to apply retroactively.
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